Microdialysis-assessed interstitium alterations during sepsis: Relationship to stage, infection, and pathogen

Autor: Kopterides, P. Nikitas, N. Vassiliadi, D. Orfanos, S.E. Theodorakopoulou, M. Ilias, I. Boutati, E. Dimitriadis, G. Maratou, E. Diamantakis, A. Armaganidis, A. Ungerstedt, U. Dimopoulou, I.
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2011
Popis: Purpose: More than a disorder of macrocirculation, sepsis is a disease affecting the microcirculation and the tissue metabolism. In vivo microdialysis (MD) is a bedside technique that can monitor tissue metabolic changes. We conducted this study aiming (1) to assess whether patients at different sepsis stages present with different MD-assessed tissue metabolic profiles and (2) to determine if different underlying types of infections and implicated pathogens are associated with dissimilar metabolic alterations. Methods: We studied 90 mechanically ventilated patients, 65 with septic shock and 25 with severe sepsis. An MD catheter was inserted in the subcutaneous adipose tissue of the upper thigh and interstitial fluid samples were collected along with arterial blood samples every 4 h for a maximum of 6 days. Lactate, pyruvate, glycerol, and glucose concentrations were measured. Results: During the study period, patients with septic shock had higher MD-assessed glycerol (P = 0.009), glycerol gradient (P = 0.016), and glucose (P = 0.004) than patients with severe sepsis, whereas tissue lactate, lactate gradient, and pyruvate dropped significantly with time (P = 0.007
Databáze: OpenAIRE